Owned land at Westminster and at Buscot in Berkshire. 1403 Member
of Commission for Defence of the Realm in the Reign of Henry IV.
1406 Appointed to be the Seneschal and Controller of Winchester. 1410 -
26 Represented Buckinghamshire in Parliament at the time of Agincourt.
1410 - 24 High Sheriff of London. 1431 Buried at Langley Marish Church.A summary of fines included in the past Court Rolls was made in
1640. Unfortunately all are now lost except one covering the period 1440
- 1441 which remained the property of the Earl of Shrewsbury. There
are three documents referring to Richard Wyot:Feudal aids for the Earl of Shrewsbury, referred to as ‘tenure
in socage’. Assessment 2/- in £ or 10% in 1441 book: "Beatrice,
Wife of Richard Cutbushe, to Richard Wyot and Margaret
his
wife, third part of a bovet(?) of land in Hallam. Fine 2s.". The same
Beatrice
gave the aforesaid Richard Wiat and his wife Margaret the
third part of a Bovet of Land in Hallam. Fine 18d.Owned land at Westminster
and at Buscot in Berkshire. 1403 Member of Commission for Defence of the
Realm in the Reign of Henry IV. 1406 Appointed to be the Seneschal
and Controller of Winchester. 1410 - 26 Represented Buckinghamshire in
Parliament at the time of Agincourt. 1410 - 24 High Sheriff of London.
1431 Buried at Langley Marish Church.A summary of fines included in the past Court Rolls was made in
1640. Unfortunately all are now lost except one covering the period 1440
- 1441 which remained the property of the Earl of Shrewsbury. There
are three documents referring to Richard Wyot:Feudal aids for the Earl of Shrewsbury, referred to as ‘tenure
in socage’. Assessment 2/- in £ or 10% in 1441 book: "Beatrice,
Wife of Richard Cutbushe, to Richard Wyot and Margaret
his
wife, third part of a bovet(?) of land in Hallam. Fine 2s.". The same
Beatrice
gave the aforesaid Richard Wiat and his wife Margaret the
third part of a Bovet of Land in Hallam. Fine 18d.

The Visitation of Kent, 1619, the Visitation of Essex, 1612,
Miscellaneous
Essex Pedigrees, and the Papers of George Wyatt, do not agree
on the Wyatt ancestry from this point on. While the Visitations were made
in George Wyatt's lifetime and are likely to be based on information given
and/or evidenced by him in the form of any ancient deeds available to him,
the Heralds were the King James' representatives and possibly inclined
to leave out anything that might give rise to a conflicting claim. Furthermore,
George's papers will have certainly unearthed additional findings in the
nearly 20 years after the last Visitation, so more credence should
be lent to George's papers, although the Visitations are the officially
approved version only to be overturned by primary documentation.